Redemption time?Frayed Knot wrote: ↑Thu Oct 12, 2023 9:42 pm Acuna has been a non-entity in this series.
So have several other Brave hitters but they're not the MVP favorite.
... Not quite.
Redemption time?Frayed Knot wrote: ↑Thu Oct 12, 2023 9:42 pm Acuna has been a non-entity in this series.
So have several other Brave hitters but they're not the MVP favorite.
In the postgame clubhouse, Arcia was mocking Harper for getting caught off first to end Game Two (“atta boy, Harper”) reporters heard it and reported it, and Bryce, because he’s Bryce, internalized it for motivation (it has been framed), hit his homers in Game Three and glared at Arcia each time he rounded the bases, leaving the Braves and their triple-ply soft fans to complain that Arcia’s remarks never should have become public…and the folks who buy digital ink by the barrel to remind anybody who doesn’t know that you’re on the record unless otherwise notified/agreed during the period when the clubhouse is open to media.
https://www.si.com/mlb/2023/10/13/orlan ... the-recordAtlanta players, after being blown out in Game 3, contended that Arcia’s taunt had been off the record. Many fans—and even some members of the media—have exhibited a similar misunderstanding of how “the record” works, so it seems like a good time for an explainer of this concept as it relates to the coverage of Major League Baseball.
As a reporter, I am the record. When the clubhouse opens to media, as the collective bargaining agreement stipulates that it must before and after each regular-season game, and in the postseason only after games, every interaction I see, hear or take part in is on the record unless I have specifically come to an agreement otherwise with someone beforehand. Players and coaches are welcome to ask after the fact if they can take something they said or did off the record; at that point, the decision is mine. Most players understand this, which is why most players don’t whine when we print what they say and do.